76 B U F FED LAMBSKIN FLIGHT JACKET r '\ ) Fig 1 -' - ,---- \ / { t ., '-.J "'-.'J.o >\, \ --:0;;. \ '\ .f The shiny leather Jacket once worn by Navy ptlots looked eternally new and had no hand pockets. Our Right Jacket real., . . Lzes some tmprove., I ments: pockets, for f , one; vel very lamb., \ skin, for another. Buffed so tt looks lived.,in before its maiden flight. 38.,46, even sizes only. #14605. $295. Imported , -{ \ ?\ - ; ' :J , \ " þ .--- <;...... 'I .;. /' .. -.--- ,; .. < "Ii '! 12. J ,}- p, l ' I} ' ,J ., I 1 \ / tî I Slde,entry hand pockets keep said FIg. 2 appendages warm. aulóaft l!!}C Can't visit the nearest Banana Repubhc? Order by phone, toll free 800.,321.,6601 \; \ \ \ \ \ \ \,\ "- , , "' " '\ " ... "-, "'- """ " " ). '" á Àl en Custom Bootmakers since 1884. Alden offers its classic full strap slip...on in genuine shell cordovan. Elegant and trimly proportioned, a classic by popular request. ....... "'- - For complete store listing and illustrated brochure, write: Alden Shoe Company, Dept. 9N, Middleborough, MA 02346. ) SEPTEMBER. 18, 1989 ated Tallinn during the war. Russian speakers make up forty per cent of the population, but we earn fifty per cent of the republic's revenue. We apply our- selves here with all our strength, and, of course, it offends us to hear that we came here to pluck rubles from the account of the Estonians. In Russian schools there are 1.23 pupils per place, and in Estonian schools 0.95 per place. So teachers do different amounts of work for the same salary, thus there is discrimination among teachers. This also offends people, you understand. And the funds to renovate schools are unequal. Estonian-language schools receive more. For example, they gave swimming pools to four Estonian schools, but only one Russian school in Tallinn has a pool." I asked the three lifetime residents of Estonia whether they spoke Estonian. "Minimally," Rudyak conceded. Kiknadze shook his head. Even Morozov, the Russian-language teacher, spoke no Estonian, though he taught in an Estonian school. He blamed the Estonians themselves for the failure of most non-Estonian resi- dents to take up the language. "For many years," he said, "the Ministry of Education of the republic was com- pletely unmoved by the fact that, in practice, the Estonian language is not taught in Russian schools. There are two hours a week of lessons in Esto- nian. Who leads these lessons? Practi- cally anybody, because the Tallinn teachers' institute was not prepared to train Estonian teachers to teach in Russian schools." Because of the Es- tonians' aversion to teaching Russian children, he went on, the schools resort to using physical-education teachers and others untrained in language in- struction. "Compare this with Esto- nian schools," he said, "w here Russian is taught four hours a week, and almost exclusively by teachers of the RussIan language. Naturally, eighty per cent of the Russian-language population does not speak Estonian." When I asked them if they had any close Estonian friends, they said they did, in the unconvincing way that Southern whites used to say that they had close black friends. I pushed them a bit, and Kiknadze finally conceded that the current tensions had affected his friendships. "Of course, you are quite right," he said. "Several of my Estonian friends ask me directly, 'What are you doing?' I answer that